HVAC Magnets

When choosing a HVAC college program, the most important point that you must ascertain is that the destination college you have chosen has the necessary accreditations. We cannot stress this point highly enough, since it means that the training program provided will be at par with the standards specified by HVAC organizations.

The premier accrediting agency for HVAC training programs are the National Center for Construction Education and Research, the Partnership for Air-Conditioning, Heating, and Refrigeration, HVAC Excellence, North American Technician Excellence and Research, Environmental Protection Agency, and the Occupational Safety and Health Administration. Select a college that has at least one accreditation.

Smaller class sizes are also important, because then you will get one to one attention from the program teachers. A good HVAC college will also have an on college science laboratory with modern equipment. Visit the campus and get a feel for the place, the teaching areas, the facilities available and talk to the senior lecturers, if they are available. You should also find out whether there is any flexibility in scheduling classes for students with external jobs, and how you could go about researching financial aid, if you might need it.

The Use of NdFeB Magnets to Increase the Efficiency of Electric Motors for Cordless Appliances Mr. Anthony C. Morcos Magnequench, Inc. motor from an automobile HVAC system was chosen as an appropriately-sized motor which could be employed in a cordless leafblower-vacuum. This motor

• Magnets have poles designated as north and south. • Magnets have lines of force called magnetic flux. • Like poles repel, opposite poles attract. • When the lines of flux are cut with a conductor, electrical current is generated.